News update
  • LATEST: Attacks on foreign students, including Bangladeshis, in Kyrgyzstan     |     
  • “BB lost ability to make independent decisions for banking sector”     |     
  • Flash floods kill at least 68 people in Afghanistan     |     
  • Spanish tourists among four killed in Afg shooting     |     
  • BD, South Asian students under attack by violent mobs in Kyrgyzstan     |     

India's Modi accused of anti-Muslim campaign hate speech

GreenWatch Desk Hate campaign 2024-04-22, 10:37pm

download-3-dda3d541eaf84484218be79bfabdd8dd1713803918.jpeg




India's opposition Congress party has lodged a formal complaint with the Election Commission over a weekend speech delivered by incumbent Prime Minister Narendra Modi.

Congress claims Modi "blatantly targeted" the country's 200-million Muslims by using thinly veiled negative statements about "infiltrators," which it said was a clear reference to Muslims.
Speaking in Rajasthan on Sunday ahead of that state's turn at the ballot box, Modi claimed that a previous Congress government had promised, "Muslims must have the first right over the nation's wealth."
He went on to claim: "It will be distributed to those who have more children. It will be distributed to the infiltrators."
He then asked the largely Hindu crowd: "Do you think your hard-earned money should be given to infiltrators? Would you accept that?"
Opposition: Modi's speech a 'blatant and direct violation of election laws'
Congress called the comments "divisive, objectionable and malicious," in its complaint, saying that by targeting "a particular religious community," Modi's words represented a "blatant and direct violation of our election laws."
Congress spokesman Abhishek Manu Singhvi, who spoke to reporters Monday after the filing, said, "We hope concrete action will be taken."
India, the world's most populous country, began voting last Friday in elections that will go on until June 4, reports DW.
It is constitutionally secular and its election code prohibits campaigning based on "communal feelings."
Hindu-first Modi accused of using religion as a wedge
Modi, who has served as India's prime minister since May 2014, is seeking his third term in office.
The unapologetically Hindu-first politician is expected to cruise to victory, but his increasingly aggressive touting of Hindu ideals and superiority have drawn criticism.
Though his Bharatoya Kanata Party's (BJP) election manifesto makes no mention of "Hindu," Modi has regularly made very public appearances promoting Hinduism as defining India. In January, for instance, he inaugurated the Ram Temple in Uttar Pradesh — a place of worship built on the former site of centuries-old mosque that had been razed by fanatic Hindus in 1992.